And in the US, the church (not Church, necessarily) is still very much a part of that superstructure. From that "Protestant work ethic" of the pilgrims to laundering our desire to steal native land through a belief in "saving" their souls, to today's white evangelicalism and their supply side Jesus.
Right now liberation theology and other cooler forms of Christianity are a small minority, but under a socialist base I believe they would naturally become the dominant form of Christianity over the current reactionary form of it we have now. Or it withers away.
And in the US, the church (not Church, necessarily) is still very much a part of that superstructure. From that "Protestant work ethic" of the pilgrims to laundering our desire to steal native land through a belief in "saving" their souls, to today's white evangelicalism and their supply side Jesus.
Right now liberation theology and other cooler forms of Christianity are a small minority, but under a socialist base I believe they would naturally become the dominant form of Christianity over the current reactionary form of it we have now. Or it withers away.